CSA Changes Draw Strong Commentary

When the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration asked for comments on changes in its CSA safety enforcement program, it got an earful.

Almost everyone supports the concept of the overall CSA program, but the details do not get much love.

The changes, part of an ongoing CSA revision process, apply to several of the seven safety performance categories that are at the heart of the program.

The agency plans to move cargo and load-securement violations out of the Cargo-Related category into the Vehicle Maintenance category. It also wants to change Cargo-Related to a new category, Hazardous Materials.

The request for comments is part of an ongoing effort by the agency to address industry concerns that the CSA process has not been open enough and that flaws in the system are causing more problems than they solve.

In a related development, the agency recently asked its industry advisory board - the Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee - to appoint a subcommittee to provide ideas and recommendations to improve CSA. The subcommittee will hold its first meeting August 28 in Alexandria, Virginia.

BASICs Changes

The BASICs changes drew vigorous comment from all sectors of the transportation community.

Trucking interests have varying reactions.

American Trucking Associations applauded the agency for opening up the CSA change process to comments and suggestions but wants more details on the data and analysis the agency uses to develop changes.

More openness would help generate more informed comments, and it would stave off skepticism about CSA, the association said.

ATA supports moving cargo and load-securement violations into the Vehicle Maintenance category. It also supports creation of a separate HazMat category, but said the method for determining performance in that category needs to be improved.

J.B. Hunt told the agency that inconsistencies in the preview scores "should cause FMCSA to question the data accuracy, methodology and peer groupings used to arrive at the pending hazardous material scores."

Schneider National and ABF Freight System said the HazMat category should not be made public until the agency can confirm that it is accurate.

"It is inappropriate to make carriers' scores public in the HM (category), as shippers, insurance providers and plaintiff's attorneys may erroneously label safe, responsible carriers as unsafe," Schneider said.

Knight Transportation said that hazmats such as paint and cleaning products make up less than 1% of all its loads, and it has had just one hazmat violation this year, but the agency's new system gives it a 98% ranking. The new category creates a bias against large carriers that haul relatively few hazmats, Knight said.

The solution, Knight said, is to not score carriers that have statistically irrelevant numbers of hazmat inspections or violations.

'Work in Progress'

Echoing the theme that Schneider sounded, Landstar said the agency needs to be more mindful that CSA has become a measuring system that shippers are using to pick carriers.

"Our concern is CSA's effect on interstate commerce when, based on the model, at any given time 35% of all carriers will be over threshold in at least one (category)," Landstar said.

"Customers are asking for published and non-published scores. Carriers and brokers are concerned about brokering freight to carriers with high CSA scores. We cannot use a 'work in progress' as an industry measurement tool."

The industry lacks confidence in CSA because it has been through so many changes, the company said.

"We believe it is difficult for FMCSA to reconcile statements such as CSA is a "major tool for measuring the safety of individual motor carriers" and CSA is used to "help identify and monitor safety problems," when a motor carrier has a high (score) one month and the same (score) may be significantly lower the next month based solely upon changes toCSA methodology."

The company went on: "We appreciate that CSA is a work in progress. However, we do not believe a work in progress should be published as a safety measurement tool. The consequences are too great. We suggest that CSA not be available for public view until data proves CSA measures safety."

Not Ready for Prime Time

The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association echoed this observation. It said the CSA system is fundamentally flawed - it "does not accurately or objectively assess motor carrier safety" - and should be suspended until the agency can fix the problems.

Steven Bryan, CEO of the CSA services provider Vigillo, said his company's analysis shows that carriers with high scores in the new HazMat category have low scores in other categories.

The "tissue-thin" data in the new hazmat category does not predict future crashes, Vigillo said.

"Yet this new, publicly available (category) will become the focus of brokers, shippers, drivers, plaintiffs and law enforcement as equivalent to (categories) with true safety backbone," the company said.

The Transportation Intermediaries Association, representing third-party logistics providers, underscored the concern about using CSA to select carriers. It asked the agency to remove all resources geared toward shippers and brokers from its website.

"These resources will have a serious adverse effect on the industry and will increase vicarious liability and negligent hiring concerns for shippers and brokers," the group said.

Lawsuit Over Data

This issue is at the heart of a suit against the agency by a group representing small carriers and brokers.

The Alliance for Safe, Efficient and Competitive Truck Transportation has asked a federal appeals court to review aspects of the CSA program.

In a recent interview, ASECTT President Tom Sanderson said that shippers are misinterpreting CSA data. Sanderson, who also is CEO of Transplace, a third-party logistics provider and broker, gave an example.

He said Transplace sent a veteran carrier with a satisfactory safety rating to a new brokerage customer, but when the carrier arrived the customer rejected it because its CSA scores were too high. The customer then said it would no longer do business with Transplace.

"It's an example of a shipper that's taking those scores as somehow being superior to a safety fitness determination," he said.

"Shippers are drawing the wrong conclusion from the data," he said.

The immediate solution, he said, is for the agency to use CSA to guide its own enforcement actions, but remove the data from the view of shippers.

"There's absolutely no benefit to having that information published on the web," he said, although he acknowledged that the system helps carriers improve their safety performance.

He said the agency would have been better off keeping CSA under wraps until it finished work on its new safety fitness rule. The proposed rule is scheduled to be published next January, and the final rule is not likely until late next year at the earliest.